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earth  month

april  2020
IMAGE: NASA

JOIN US AND TAKE ACTION TO CREATE A BETTER FUTURE

Attend our next meeting (info found on homepage) if you're interested in helping to plan and coordinate Earth Month.

Register your organization's event during Earth Month 2020.

Download this form and email it to our event coordinator.

Questions about Earth Month 2020? Contact our public outreach.


JOIN THE ALLIANCE!
individuals and organizations

Earth Month 2020: A how-to:

For workers:
  1. Organize your workplace. Talk with your coworkers about the climate crisis, and how it might impact your jobs and lives. Are they interested in taking action? Tell them about this website and the Calendar of Events for Earth Month 2020.
  2. Submit a resolution to your employer. Tell them about you and your coworkers concerns about the climate crisis, and explain why your workplace should join the Earth Month 2020 activities.
  3. Publicize! Post flyers, send emails, and post on social media so all your colleagues know about Earth Month 2020 and encourage everyone to participate.
For students:
  1. Tell your parents. If you're going to leave school to participate in the Earth Month 2020 activities, make sure your parents know where you're going to be. Invite them to join in all of the activities you plan on attending.
  2. Tell your classmates. Talk with your classmates about the climate crisis. Does it make sense to keep studying for a future that current politicians and business execs are ruining? Ask them to join you in all the activities happening during Earth Month 2020.
  3. Tell your teachers. Invite them to visit this website and get involved in Earth Month 2020. (See if you can make up missed work if you're concerned about grades.)

Follow us on social media for updates!


Corvallis, OR is located within the homelands of the Pinefu, Chemapho, and Luckiamute Kalapuyan peoples.  Following the Willamette Valley Treaty of 1855 (Kalapuya etc. Treaty), Kalapuya people were forcibly removed to the Grand Ronde Reservation in Western Oregon. Today, living descendants of these people are a part of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon and the Confederated Tribes of the Siletz Indians.
We acknowledge that indigenous peoples are among the communities most threatened by climate change, and we honor their work & leadership in the fight for climate justice.
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  • About
  • Earth Month
  • Get Involved
  • Media